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The Future Value of your Money

15 November 2009 108 views No Comment

As soon as you spend money, it is gone and you will never get it back. Surely you will earn some more money, but it is not the same money. You have lost the money, unavailable for investing it, unavailable for paying back debt. Looking at things differently, you may actually have spent much more on your purchase.

Look at money from a different perspective for a moment:

If I spend some money on some item now, it will not be able to generate interest.

The magic word in this statement is ‘interest’. If I buy some item at this point in time, I am litterally missing out on obtaining interest on it. Let’s taken an example of this, a men’s suit which I bought a few weeks ago. The suit costed me 220 Euros, which is not expensive. However, would I have not bought this suit, I would have had this money available to put on my savings account. Assuming that the savings account has a duration of 5 years with an annual interest rate of 4%, these 220 Euros would turn into 268 Euros over that 5-year period. This is an increase of 21%.

If you are currently paying back debt, and you are allowed to transfer additional one-off sums, the effect is the same; the interest rate for debt is much higher than it is for savings (for example 12%). Suppse you are paying back a 10,000 Euro loan at an interest rate of 12%, during the next 60 months. The monthly payback rate would usually be 219 Euro per month, during a period of 60 months. Now suppose, you would make a down payment of 220 Euros (what you would have otherwise spent on the suit). This leaves you with a monthly payment of 215 Euros per month. You are saving 60×4 Euros, making a total of 240 Euros.

The benefit of using such a calculation as the ones above, is to be contious of the future value of the money you are spending. For myself, it allows me to strictly determine whether I really, really need an item, and whether or not it will enrich my life. If it does not enrich my life significantly, or if it does not help me in some way to either reduce expenses or increase income, I will usually not buy it. I would rather put the money aside on a bank account, or perhaps invest it, so it can grow over time.

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